The phrase “fecal sludge business model” probably doesn’t evoke an image of something you’d like to wade right into. But if you’re a business who’s ignoring waste management you might just be missing out on the next big business opportunity – and a way to solve a growing global crisis.

As we mark Earth Overshoot Day this week, the global population is surging toward eight billion. And with it, food production, businesses and households add ever bigger mountains of organic waste to the planet. What’s special about organic waste is that it is rich in nutrients, water and energy that can be recovered to power our economies and grow our food. For savvy businesses -- both large and small -- that waste is packed with potential wealth.

For social entrepreneurs and governments, wealth-from-waste business ideas may be a source of income, but can also help solve social and environmental problems. Currently, especially in developing countries, much of our waste is abandoned to the environment, polluting drinking water, dangerously overflowing landfills or septic tanks or dirtying public spaces. Often the waste is burned, choking up local air and releasing carbon. Growing urban centers are screaming for waste management solutions. And with food needs rising and water resources falling, farmers around the world are struggling to irrigate their land. Many turn to untreated wastewater, creating serious health risks across Asia, Africa and elsewhere.

So you want to solve these problems and make money while doing so? Pulling together years of research, WLE and International Water Management Institute (IWMI) scientists’ new book Resource Recovery from Waste profiles business models based on real-world cases. Each model is scalable and served up for cutting-edge entrepreneurs or the public sector to swoop in to innovate and expand.

While conventional waste projects depend on subsidies, there are hopeful signs emerging of increasing cost recovery and profitability. From Spain to Sri Lanka, Mexico to Morocco, these models are rolling out and recovering cash.

A worker at a human waste compost plant in Nairobi, Kenya. The compost makes for a nutrient-rich fertilizer while decreasing the amount of dangerous solid waste that might otherwise pollute the natural environment.

Thor Windham Wright / IWMI

Here are just four potential ways to make wealth from waste:

1. Subscription sludge removal: Much of the world have no flush toilets, so they use home-made pit latrines. Once the pits are full, households often dump the “fecal sludge” in their own backyards or nearby environments. So markets exist for sludge removal, especially as governments see the health and economic benefits. If it can be offered on a subscription basis as we’ve seen in Bangladesh, companies can sell the sludge to treatment plants, where it can be processed into biogas or compost. There are a whole range of business models to make salary from septage.

2. Pelletized sludge: Once collected, it’s relatively cheap to turn fecal sludge into safe fertilizer pellets for farming. Mixed with other organic waste, the process creates rich fertilizers that can boost crop yields and return nutrients and carbon to the soils – all while decreasing waste dumping. Our researchers in Africa are investigating techniques to make the fertilizer rich in nutrients but cheap in cost – ready for a range of business innovations.

3. Post-digestion gas: Heaps of food waste is created every day by factories, slaughterhouses, restaurants and citizens. This organic waste can be fed into a machine called a bio-digester, which transforms it into bio-gas energy. The machines are affordable enough to be sold to food producers for their own energy needs. Or private suppliers can install and operate the digesters then sell the biogas back to the institution or to third party customers – as business is starting to do in Bangalore.

4. Peachy-clean wastewater: Untreated wastewater creates hazards for communities and nature, but it is also an untapped resource. Treatment technology is getting cheaper, and businesses and cities can clean wastewater and sell it back to farmers and agribusiness for irrigation. Egypt and Tunisia are doing just that – treating water to irrigate peach, olive and lemon trees. Projects in Iran and Spain are even formalizing “water swaps,” where companies treat wastewater then sell it back at reduced costs to farmers in exchange for freshwater rights. And barely a drop gone to waste. Many informal swaps already take place – can new enterprises formalize and innovate?

Our research has been assessing the value chains, profitability, risks and regulatory environments of dozens of these models around the world. Wealth-from-waste business ideas are ready to be adapted, through savvy local and international enterprises or public-private partnerships.

The world’s population is growing, and piles of waste are rising with it. But the world shouldn’t waste waste. Slowly businesses and governments are recognizing the potential profitability of wastewater, food waste and fecal sludge. Are you ready to wade in?

IWMI/WLE scientists Miriam Otoo and Pay Drechsel edited Resource Recovery from Waste, drawing from IWMI/WLE, EAWAG, CEWAS, WHO and other research on creating business opportunities from Resource Recovery and Reuse (RRR).

The world’s rapid transition to urbanization contributes greatly to the pressure on water, food security, and energy, as the World Water Week Workshop on Securing Water and Food in an Urbanising World explored. We cannot simply look at urbanization as an urban problem. As Pay Drechsel from the

Related publications

CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems (WLE). 2013. Business models for resource recovery & reuse. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems (WLE). 2p

CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems (WLE). 2014. Safe nutrient, water & energy recovery - developing a business Case: Enterprise based solutions for reuse of domestic and agro- industrial waste. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems (WLE). 02 April 2014

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The views and opinions expressed in this blog are strictly those of the author of each post. They do not represent the opinions of the CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems (WLE) or of the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) or any associated partners. This is an open space for constructive scientific discussion. If you disagree with the opinions or information displayed, please leave a comment or write to the editor: wle(at)cgiar.org.